The right therapy is the one that fits the person in front of it. Two people with the same diagnosis can respond to completely different methods, which is why effective mental health care is built from a range of approaches rather than a single technique. At Santa Clara Mental Health, your treatment plan draws on proven clinical therapies, trauma-focused methods, and whole-person practices, combined and adjusted around your goals, history, and how you respond. The result is care that targets the full picture of what you are dealing with, not just its most visible symptom.
Our licensed clinicians serve adults across Santa Clara and the wider Bay Area, both in person and through our statewide Virtual IOP. This page explains the therapies we use, what each one is designed to do, and how we decide which belong in your plan.
Want to talk through which approach might fit your situation? Our team is one call away.
Contact Santa Clara Mental Health at (408) 741-9292Â or visit our Contact Us page for a free, confidential assessment to begin your journey toward recovery and renewed hope.
Treatment starts with a clinical assessment of your symptoms, history, strengths, and goals. From there, your care team chooses a starting set of therapies and refines them as you progress – adding, swapping, or deepening methods based on what is working. Most plans blend several approaches rather than relying on one.
Treatment starts with a clinical assessment of your symptoms, history, strengths, and goals. From there, your care team chooses a starting set of therapies and refines them as you progress – adding, swapping, or deepening methods based on what is working. Most plans blend several approaches rather than relying on one.
A few things shape which therapies end up in your plan:
Because the plan is built for you and adjusted over time, no two look exactly alike – which is what a personalized treatment plan is meant to deliver.
There is a reason we rarely rely on a single method. Mental health conditions tend to affect thoughts, emotions, relationships, and physical health all at once, and a plan that works on several of those fronts at the same time usually produces steadier, longer-lasting progress than one technique applied on its own. It also means that if one approach turns out not to fit, others are already in place to carry the work forward while your team adjusts.
We group our therapies into five broad categories. Most treatment plans pull from more than one, and the table below shows what each category is built to do.
Therapy Type | What It Focuses On | Commonly Helps With |
|---|---|---|
Talk and skills-based therapies | Shifting unhelpful thoughts and building coping skills | Anxiety, depression, mood and behavior patterns |
Trauma and grief therapies | Safely processing painful experiences and loss | PTSD, complex trauma, grief and bereavement |
Expressive and movement-based therapies | Engaging creativity and the body in healing | Stress, emotional expression, overall well-being |
Group and family programs | Building connection, communication, and support | Isolation, relationship strain, sustaining recovery |
Lifestyle and wellness support | Reinforcing daily habits that hold progress in place | Sleep, nutrition, long-term stability |
Each category below lists the specific therapies it includes. Select any therapy name to open its page and learn more.
These methods form the backbone of treatment for many conditions, helping you recognize and change the patterns that keep distress in place.
Private, one-on-one sessions built entirely around your goals and pace.
Identifies and reshapes the thought patterns that drive anxiety and low mood.
Builds emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and healthier relationships.
Helps you make room for difficult emotions while acting on your values.
A short-term, goal-driven approach that builds on your existing strengths.
Strengthens your own motivation and confidence to make lasting change.
Clinically proven methods, selected and matched to your diagnosis.
Painful experiences and unresolved loss need a paced, specialized approach, because trauma can resurface when it is pushed too quickly.
Guided eye movements that help the brain reprocess traumatic memories.
Releases the physical tension and stress that trauma stores in the body.
A paced, trauma-informed track for PTSD and complex trauma.
Helps you separate your identity from the experiences you have lived through.
Focused, compassionate support for processing loss and bereavement.
For emotions that words alone cannot reach, creative and physical approaches offer another way to process and heal.
Creative expression for emotions that are difficult to put into words.
Uses listening, rhythm, and songwriting to process and steady emotion.
Structured, engaging activities that rebuild confidence and connection.
Present-moment awareness practices that lower stress and ease anxiety.
Supervised physical activity to support mood, sleep, and energy.
Recovery rarely happens in isolation. These programs rebuild connection and put new skills into practice alongside others.
Facilitated peer sessions to share experiences and practice new skills.
Improves communication and understanding among you and your loved ones.
Practical education about mental health for you and your family.
Recognize early warning signs and build a plan to stay well.
Daily habits play a quiet but powerful role in mental health, and they often determine whether progress holds over time.
Guidance on how food and nutrition affect mood, focus, and energy.
Practical techniques to improve the disrupted sleep that so often accompanies distress.
Additional evidence-based techniques matched to your evolving needs.
Different challenges call for different starting points. For ongoing anxiety or depression, treatment often centers on talk and skills-based methods that reshape unhelpful thought patterns, supported by mindfulness and movement. For trauma-related conditions, including PTSD, the focus shifts toward paced, trauma-specific work that helps the brain and body process difficult memories safely. When isolation or relationship strain is part of the picture, group and family programs move closer to the center of the plan.
For anyone managing a complex or co-occurring diagnosis, the plan usually layers several of these approaches together. Your care team makes these connections during your assessment and revisits them as treatment unfolds, so the therapies in your plan keep pace with where you are – not where you began.
Therapy here is collaborative from the first session. You and your therapist set goals together, check in on what is helping, and adjust the plan as you go. Depending on your needs, you might work one-on-one, in a group with peers, or alongside family members – and most people experience a mix of these over time.
Over the course of treatment, your therapy might include:
We also keep therapy connected to the rest of your care. Your therapists, psychiatric providers, and wellness team share information so that your clinical work, medication, and daily support all point in the same direction. The aim throughout is steady, practical progress you can use in everyday life.
Progress in therapy is not always linear, and a strong working relationship with your therapist matters as much as the method itself. We expect honest feedback – if an approach is not helping, we want to know, so we can change course rather than wait. That openness is part of how a plan stays effective over time.
Sessions follow a consistent rhythm, though the exact cadence depends on your level of care and how you are progressing. Whether you attend in person in Santa Clara or join remotely through our statewide Virtual IOP, the structure and quality of your therapy stay the same. And because plans are reviewed regularly, the mix of therapies you start with is rarely the mix you finish with – it evolves as you do.
The method matters, but so does the person delivering it. Every therapy at Santa Clara Mental Health is provided by licensed clinicians – therapists, psychiatric providers, and trauma-trained specialists – who choose each approach deliberately and deliver it with training and experience behind it. Several of the modalities we offer, such as EMDR and DBT, call for specialized training, which our team brings to the work.
That expertise is part of what makes an evidence-based approach effective. The same technique can land very differently depending on the skill and judgment of the clinician using it, which is why we pair proven methods with people who know how to apply them well. Our clinicians also coordinate closely as a team, reviewing your progress together rather than working in isolation.
Not sure where to begin? A short, confidential conversation can help you find the right starting point.
Contact Santa Clara Mental Health at (408) 741-9292Â or visit our Contact Us page for a free, confidential assessment to begin your journey toward recovery and renewed hope.
It starts with a clinical assessment of your symptoms, history, and goals, which your care team uses to build a personalized treatment plan during the admissions process. We typically begin with a core set of therapies and adjust them over time based on how you respond. You help shape that plan at every step – your preferences and feedback matter.
Yes – and most people do. A typical plan pairs a primary talk therapy with a skills-based method and one or two complementary practices, all grounded in evidence-based therapies. Combining approaches lets your care address several parts of your mental health at once rather than one in isolation.
Individual therapy is one-on-one work with a therapist focused entirely on your goals, history, and pace. Group therapy brings together a small set of peers to share experiences and practice skills with a clinician’s guidance. Many plans include both, because each offers something the other cannot.
Yes. Creative and body-based options such as art therapy, music therapy, mindfulness, and supervised fitness work alongside clinical methods rather than replacing them. They give you additional ways to process emotion, manage stress, and support overall well-being.
Most major California insurance plans help cover therapy delivered within our programs, and checking your benefits takes only a minute. You can verify your insurance online for free, with no obligation. Our admissions team can also confirm your coverage and explain any out-of-pocket costs directly.
Yes. Aftercare and discharge planning keeps important therapies in place as you transition out of a structured program, including ongoing individual sessions and relapse prevention groups. The goal is to protect the progress you have made and keep support available as you return to daily life.